Pope Francis and former U.S. National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden also received nominations as well as Putin.

Pakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai, shot in the head by the Taliban for advocating girls' right to education, is also thought to be among the candidates, as are several Russian dissidents who have spoken out for human rights.

Conflicts between protesters and the governments of Thailand and Venezuela are also expected to be debated by the committee.

"We are getting an increasing number of nominations from people in countries that have never submitted nominations before," Lundestad said.

Presumably most Nobel Peace Prize recipients spend their lives advancing the cause of social justice, in some way, through peaceful and nonviolent means. Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela, of course, are two of the award’s most famous recipients, who lived up to that standard. Imagine, though, if they had to share that award with President Putin, of all people? That strikes me as rather unjust.

That being said, the number of people eligible to nominate candidates is virtually limitless. Thus, one wonders if in a stunning act of hubris, President Putin merely flexed his muscles and ordered one of his henchmen to put his name forward:

Although nominations are kept secret for 50 years, thousands of people around the world are eligible to propose candidates, including any member of any national assembly, and many make their picks public.

The committee narrowed its list to between 25 and 40 on Tuesday and it will cut its list to about a dozen by the end of April.

Will more belligerence from Moscow affect the committee’s decision? Let’s hope so.